Maybe the gray was not where people went to get lost. Maybe it was the
perfect place to be reborn. For in that gray was the potential to be
anything, to become anyone.
Returning to protagonist school had confronted me with a mixed bag of
change. Some things were good. I was a star athlete on my Twenty-Three
Skidd team, my friends and I were closer than ever, I'd made amends with
my traditionalist headmistress, and the surprisingly kind grandson of
King Midas was doing his best to win my affection.
Other changes, however, were not so sweet. The greater realm now knew
about my Pure Magic, and an upcoming trial by the realm higher-ups and
Fairy Godmothers would decide my fate. My former princess archenemy was
under a sleeping curse, which meant we couldn't access the vital
memories of a dead Fairy Godmother stored in her brain. The commons
rebellion in our realm was only growing in strength. And I . . . Well,
I'd taken my first life. The antagonist queen's careful planning paired
with my hard-to-control powers of life had caused me to snap and kill
someone. He'd been a villain, yes, but that didn't placate my morality.
Especially given the ongoing internal war I struggled with over my
abilities and their potential.
As I fought to be a strong hero, princess, and more importantly person,
I was flogged by the many questions posed by enemies, friends, and my
own conscience about how I was changing--and what I was changing into.
Would my magic inevitably corrupt me like the antagonists wanted and our
realm's higher-ups feared? My personal fate aside, would my friends and
I be able to stop the antagonists from taking over our realm? And
finally, was I more afraid of not being powerful enough to stop them, or
being even more powerful than anybody anticipated?